Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)

This paper reports discovery of a new genus <em>Lupangus</em> gen. n. with three new flightless weevils endemic to the forests of the Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania: <em>L. asterius</em> sp. n. (East Usambara; the type species), <em>L. jason</em> sp. n. (Ulugur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vasily V. Grebennikov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2017-06-01
Series:Fragmenta entomologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.fragmentaentomol.org/index.php/fragmenta/article/view/229
id doaj-846ca9610ee8484aae13b1c11498ce84
record_format Article
spelling doaj-846ca9610ee8484aae13b1c11498ce842020-11-25T03:18:52ZengPAGEPress PublicationsFragmenta entomologica0429-288X2284-48802017-06-01491375510.4081/fe.2017.229173Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)Vasily V. Grebennikov0CFIA, Ottawa, ONThis paper reports discovery of a new genus <em>Lupangus</em> gen. n. with three new flightless weevils endemic to the forests of the Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania: <em>L. asterius</em> sp. n. (East Usambara; the type species), <em>L. jason</em> sp. n. (Uluguru) and<em> L. orpheus</em> sp. n. (Udzungwa). Maximum Likelihood phylogenetic analyses using parts of mitochondrial (COI), nuclear ribosomal (28S) genes, as well as the nuclear spacer region (ITS2) from 46 terminals grouped together the reciprocally monophyletic <em>Lupangus</em> (3 terminals) and <em>Typoderus</em> (3 terminals), with all three clades strongly supported. Phylogenetic analysis of 32 COI-5’ sequences recovered <em>Lupangus</em> species as reciprocally monophyletic, with <em>L</em>. <em>orpheus</em> being the sister to the rest. Internal phylogeny within both <em>L. jason</em> and <em>L.</em> <em>orpheus</em> are geographically structured, while that of <em>L. asterius</em> is not. Temporal analysis of <em>Lupangus</em> evolution using COI-5’ data assessed under slow and fast substitution rate schemes estimated separation of mitochondrial lineages leading to three <em>Lupangus</em> species at about 7–8 Ma and about 1.9–2.1 Ma, respectively. Temporal analyses consistently failed to suggest correlation between the timing of <em>Lupangus</em> evolution and the late Pleistocene climatic fluctuations, thus rejecting the hypothesis of faunal interchanges during the wettest periods of the last million years. Applicability of flightless weevils for dispersal-vicariance analysis is reviewed, and their mostly undocumented and taxonomically entangled diversity in the Tanzanian Eastern Arc Mountains is briefly highlighted.http://www.fragmentaentomol.org/index.php/fragmenta/article/view/229molecular phylogeny, DNA barcoding, COI, ITS2, 28S
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vasily V. Grebennikov
spellingShingle Vasily V. Grebennikov
Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
Fragmenta entomologica
molecular phylogeny, DNA barcoding, COI, ITS2, 28S
author_facet Vasily V. Grebennikov
author_sort Vasily V. Grebennikov
title Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
title_short Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
title_full Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
title_fullStr Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeography and sister group of Lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Molytinae)
title_sort phylogeography and sister group of lupangus, a new genus for three new flightless allopatric forest litter weevils endemic to the eastern arc mountains, tanzania (coleoptera: curculionidae, molytinae)
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Fragmenta entomologica
issn 0429-288X
2284-4880
publishDate 2017-06-01
description This paper reports discovery of a new genus <em>Lupangus</em> gen. n. with three new flightless weevils endemic to the forests of the Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania: <em>L. asterius</em> sp. n. (East Usambara; the type species), <em>L. jason</em> sp. n. (Uluguru) and<em> L. orpheus</em> sp. n. (Udzungwa). Maximum Likelihood phylogenetic analyses using parts of mitochondrial (COI), nuclear ribosomal (28S) genes, as well as the nuclear spacer region (ITS2) from 46 terminals grouped together the reciprocally monophyletic <em>Lupangus</em> (3 terminals) and <em>Typoderus</em> (3 terminals), with all three clades strongly supported. Phylogenetic analysis of 32 COI-5’ sequences recovered <em>Lupangus</em> species as reciprocally monophyletic, with <em>L</em>. <em>orpheus</em> being the sister to the rest. Internal phylogeny within both <em>L. jason</em> and <em>L.</em> <em>orpheus</em> are geographically structured, while that of <em>L. asterius</em> is not. Temporal analysis of <em>Lupangus</em> evolution using COI-5’ data assessed under slow and fast substitution rate schemes estimated separation of mitochondrial lineages leading to three <em>Lupangus</em> species at about 7–8 Ma and about 1.9–2.1 Ma, respectively. Temporal analyses consistently failed to suggest correlation between the timing of <em>Lupangus</em> evolution and the late Pleistocene climatic fluctuations, thus rejecting the hypothesis of faunal interchanges during the wettest periods of the last million years. Applicability of flightless weevils for dispersal-vicariance analysis is reviewed, and their mostly undocumented and taxonomically entangled diversity in the Tanzanian Eastern Arc Mountains is briefly highlighted.
topic molecular phylogeny, DNA barcoding, COI, ITS2, 28S
url http://www.fragmentaentomol.org/index.php/fragmenta/article/view/229
work_keys_str_mv AT vasilyvgrebennikov phylogeographyandsistergroupoflupangusanewgenusforthreenewflightlessallopatricforestlitterweevilsendemictotheeasternarcmountainstanzaniacoleopteracurculionidaemolytinae
_version_ 1724625252973019136